Definition. From the beginning, to fine — repeat from the start until reaching the marking ‘fine’.
D.C. al fine is shorthand for Da capo al fine — ‘from the beginning, to fine’. The instruction tells the performer to return to the start of the piece and play forward until reaching a marking labeled ‘fine’ (Italian for ‘end’). The repeat ends at the fine marking, not at the original end of the music.
The direction is essential to ABA-style forms. The A section is played first; then the B section; then the performer returns to the A section via D.C. al fine, where ‘fine’ is marked at the end of A, indicating that the piece concludes there rather than continuing through B again.
Without the ‘al fine’ qualifier, the D.C. would imply repeating to the very end of the piece. The qualifier is essential to make clear where the repeat stops.
Italian, ‘from the beginning, to the end’ — D.C. (da capo) + al (‘to the’) + fine (‘end’).
Play to the D.C. marking; jump back to the beginning; play forward until reaching ‘fine’; stop. Don’t play past fine on the repeat.
From the beginning, to fine — repeat from the start until reaching the marking ‘fine’.
Italian, ‘from the beginning, to the end’ — D.C. (da capo) + al (‘to the’) + fine (‘end’).
Play to the D.C. marking; jump back to the beginning; play forward until reaching ‘fine’; stop. Don’t play past fine on the repeat.
D.C. al Fine is commonly abbreviated as D.C. al fine.
Related terms include: Da Capo, D.S. al Coda, Fine.
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